logo
How do you climate-proof promenade-style theatre?

How do you climate-proof promenade-style theatre?

The only pollutant Waiting for Godot's Pozzo, played by Tom Keenan, is scripted to inhale is whatever substance he's used to pack his pipe.
But as historic wildfires ravaged northern Manitoba this spring and summer, the outdoor company Shakespeare in the Ruins — whose productions are always shaped by the tendencies of the weather — had its repertory season of Waiting for Godot and Macbeth forged by the smoky climate.
Scheduled to open June 5, the play director Emma Welham calls 'Mackers' did little to contradict its cursed reputation: hours before the promenade production at the Trappist monastery ruins was to begin, the company cancelled the Scottish play owing to provincewide air-quality advisories.
Leif Norman photo
Lindsay Nance (left) as Lady Macbeth and Darren Martens as Macbeth in the Scottish play
After a two-day hiatus, Macbeth, which shared three actors with Godot, received clearance to go on. Then came a lightning storm that washed out two more performances.
Of the 40 performances the company had scheduled this season, which wrapped up Sunday, 14 were either cancelled or heavily modified owing to injury or health concerns, with actors' conditions, especially lost voices, exacerbated by the heavy smoke in the air.
On back-to-back days, the directors of both shows were thrust into the action as replacements, with Welham subbing for Keenan's three roles in Macbeth and Rodrigo Beilfuss taking the actor's place as the brutal charlatan Pozzo.
For a stretch, the planned promenade of Macbeth became stationary to accommodate Darren Martens, who powered through his final five performances as Macbeth while nursing an inflamed lumbar disc.
Beilfuss says in a given year between one and four performances are cancelled or postponed owing to rain and other weather phenomena. But this season, which still managed, to the artistic director's delight, to set company attendance records, re-enforced the twinned destinies of great outdoor theatre and the great outdoors, period.
'Human beings have kind of divorced ourselves from nature and that's not natural or normal. We are animals that need to be in contact with nature and because we aren't, that's why things are collapsing,' says Beilfuss, the AD since 2019.
'The great gift to me as the leader of SiR is that we bring people back into nature. It's a really peaceful place to be and I hope we can keep doing theatre out there, you know?'
Beilfuss is by no means signalling an abandonment of the ruins, where the company's ever-shifting brand of classical summer theatre has lived since 1994. But he says the organization can't pretend climate-change events are anomalies. So in advance of next season, Beilfuss says he's exploring revised environmental contingencies to address climate effects on production locale.
Programming one production at the ruins and another at an indoor space in the city? Producing only one play as opposed to the standard two? Those are options Beilfuss is floating. (Rainbow Stage, which has performed since 1954 in Kildonan Park, produced its first off-site indoor musical, Afterlight, in 2023.)
'I have all of these models I could run, but the truth is, people really want the shows at the ruins because it has become a summer event. They want to come out to be at the park and they want to promenade because it's only us that do that,' Beilfuss says.
'In the long-term, it would be lovely to build a semi-permanent structure on site that's sealed so that in case of weather, we can just move into it.'
But the artistic director readily admits there's nothing that can top nimbly produced theatre that responds to the possibilities of shifting winds.
Weekly
A weekly look at what's happening in Winnipeg's arts and entertainment scene.
That was made especially clear during the Canada Day performance of Godot when right before intermission, Didi (Arne MacPherson) and Gogo (Cory Wojcik) consider parting company.
'Didi says, 'Well, shall we go again?' Huge thunderclap. And then Gogo says, 'Yes, let's go.' It was just so beautifully synced,'' says Beilfuss.
'It's those moments you cannot have in any (indoor) theatre on the planet. I'll remember for the rest of my life when (Gogo) says to look at the little cloud, which is in the script, and everybody in the audience looks up.'
With outdoor theatre, to paraphrase Pozzo, one absorbs the air in spite of one's precautions.
ben.waldman@winnipegfreepress.com
Ben WaldmanReporter
Ben Waldman is a National Newspaper Award-nominated reporter on the Arts & Life desk at the Free Press. Born and raised in Winnipeg, Ben completed three internships with the Free Press while earning his degree at Ryerson University's (now Toronto Metropolitan University's) School of Journalism before joining the newsroom full-time in 2019. Read more about Ben.
Every piece of reporting Ben produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.
Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.
Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stratford Festival mourns the loss of actor Michael Blake, co-star of ATP's King James
Stratford Festival mourns the loss of actor Michael Blake, co-star of ATP's King James

Calgary Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Calgary Herald

Stratford Festival mourns the loss of actor Michael Blake, co-star of ATP's King James

Actor Michael Blake, who played a variety of roles during 10 seasons at the Stratford Festival, has died, the company announced on Monday. Article content Blake, 53, was considered one of the most gifted actors of his generation. He played an extraordinary variety of parts and did so with an ability and ease that was rare, the Festival said in a release. Article content Article content 'Each part Michael played was powerfully realized,' Stratford Festival artistic director Antoni Cimolino said. 'His work was true and realistic. His portrayals had an integrity that was compelling. It drew you into his reality.' Article content Article content Blake also performed at theatres across Canada, as well as on film and TV, but he will be remembered in Stratford for bringing to life a variety of characters — an unforgettable Othello, a heartbreaking Macduff in Macbeth, a good-hearted Master Page in The Merry Wives of Windsor, a delightfully villainous Don John in Much Ado About Nothing, a commanding Cominius in Coriolanus, an excellent Duke of Clarence in Richard III, and Albany in King Lear. Those performances have been captured on film, the Festival said. Article content Article content It total, Blake performed in 25 Stratford productions between 2011 and 2023, including Errico in Napoli Milionaria!, Mr. Balance in The School for Scandal, George Deever in All My Sons, Edmund in King Lear, Dumaine in All's Well That Ends Well, Cleante in Tartuff, and Sebastian in Twelfth Night. Article content

Stratford Festival extends to December for the first time ever
Stratford Festival extends to December for the first time ever

CTV News

time5 days ago

  • CTV News

Stratford Festival extends to December for the first time ever

A sign for the Stratford Festival seen in July 2023. (File) With strong ticket sales and continuing demand, the Stratford Festival is expanding their extended show catalogue. This season the festival takes the unprecedented step of extending four shows, 'Annie', 'Macbeth', 'Dirty Rotten Scoundrels' and 'Anne of Green Gables'. They are also extending their production of Annie longer than ever before, with an extra six weeks of added shows, taking the festival into December for the first time ever. It is a move that makes a lot of sense for the star of' Annie'. 'It starts about like two weeks before Christmas, and then our big finale scene is in Mr. Warbucks mansion, and it's decorated for Christmas' said Harper Rae Asch, who plays Annie. The young actor is excited to be part of a Stratford Festival first. 'I'm very excited because now Annie is going to be the longest running show in festival history,' she said. Stratford Festival leadership now is the right time to try something new. 'It's a reflection of how well the productions are being received so far this year, and it also meets an aspiration, that we've had over the last few years to experiment with some holiday programing,' said Anita Gaffney, executive director of the Stratford Festival. Harper Rae Asch Harper Rae Asch seen on July 18, 2025. She plays Annie in Stratford Festival's production of 'Annie' (CTV News/Jeff Pickel) After a sluggish 2024 season Gaffney said a longer season will help them get back on more solid footing. 'We're seeing this year's sales are a nice bump ahead of the previous year, so we wanted to take this chance to add some more opportunity to exceeds our goals so that we're in a balanced financial place,' said Gaffney. Staff acknowledge the move is not without risk. 'We don't know if this is going to work, we don't know what the weather's going to be like., so there is some risk there, but there is great benefit opportunities,' said Gaffney. More information about the Stratford Festival and tickets can be found online.

News briefs for Saturday, July 12, 2025
News briefs for Saturday, July 12, 2025

Winnipeg Free Press

time13-07-2025

  • Winnipeg Free Press

News briefs for Saturday, July 12, 2025

A collection of breaking news briefs filed on Saturday, July 12, 2025 10:35 PM The Winnipeg Folk Festival is warning festivalgoers about laced gel cap mushrooms on site. 'Gel can mushrooms should be avoided as they may also have an additive in them, which can lead to fainting,' the folk fest said in an email Saturday. Several concertgoers at the Birds Hill park fest have received first aid after they experienced an 'adverse reaction,' the email said. The 50th edition of the fest wraps up Sunday. 10:54 AM Rainbow Stage has cancelled its matinee performance of Rock of Ages due to poor air quality Saturday. The musical theatre company said it is monitoring the forecast and hopes to proceed with its 7:30 p.m. show tonight. Those with tickets to today's 2 p.m. show will be given an option to attend the evening performance instead. Refunds will also be provided. 'As an open-air theatre, this is now, regrettably, one of the many nature-related challenges that we face,' the company said in a news release. 'Everyone here at Rainbow Stage is equally disappointed to be in this position.' The air quality index forecast for Winnipeg at 2 p.m. is 10-plus, or very high risk. 10:20 AM A 25-year-old man is facing various charges after police say he damaged a fire truck and assaulted a Winnipeg Fire Paramedic Service crew member. Winnipeg police say WFPS was called to the 300 block of Princess Street Friday around 1:20 a.m. for reports of a pick up truck on fire. As the fire truck travelled to the scene, a man began hitting it with a metal pole near Princess Street and Logan Avenue, a Saturday media release states. Once WFPS parked, a crew member exited the truck and was confronted by the man who allegedly hit him in the face with the pole. Police say the man was linked to the vehicle fire. He is facing charges of assault with a weapon, possession of a weapon, mischief under $5,000, arson causing damage to property, possession of incendiary material and fail to comply with condition of release order. The man was detained in custody. 10:08 AM With a severe weather alert indicating an air quality index of 11 at Birds Hill Park this morning, the Winnipeg Folk Festival sent out an advisory via its app this morning for people travelling to the site today to come prepared with masks. Wildfire smoke is blanketing the province, reducing air quality significantly. An 11 rating is a very high health risk. People, especially at-risk populations, children and seniors, are advised to reduce strenuous activities outdoors, especially if experiencing symptoms such as coughing and throat irritation.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store